Friday, November 03, 2023

UPDATED
"You knew there were civilians": Blitzer stunned as Israeli official confirms refugee camp strike

Tatyana Tandanpolie
Wed, November 1, 2023

Wolf Blitzer Artur Widak/NurPhoto via Getty Images

CNN's Wolf Blitzer confronted an Israeli Defense Forces spokesman on-air about a Tuesday bombing of a crowded refugee camp in the northern Gaza Strip that Israel says killed a senior Hamas official who was involved in the Oct. 7 terror attack.

The Times of Israel reported that the IDF indicated the strike had killed the commander of Hamas' Central Jabaliya Battalion, Ibrahim Biari, as well as “several other terrorists and caused underground terror tunnels to collapse, bringing down several nearby buildings.” The report also noted that "at least 50 people were killed in the strike and subsequent collapse" per Palestinian reports.

Blitzer questioned Lt. Col. Richard Hecht of the IDF on the bombing's civilian death toll, asking if Israel still decided to go through with the attack on the Jabalya refugee camp to kill the Hamas official knowing that a number of innocent civilians would be killed in the process.

"But even if that Hamas commander was there, amidst all those Palestinian refugees who are in there in that Jabalya refugee camp, Israel still went ahead and dropped a bomb there attempting to kill this Hamas, Hamas commander, knowing that a lot of innocent civilians, men, women and children presumably would be killed. Is that what I’m hearing?" Blitzer asked.

"That’s not what you are hearing, Wolf," Hecht replied. "We, again, were focused on this commander, again, who — you’ll get more data who this man was — killed, many, many Israelis. And we’re doing everything we can. It’s a very complicated battle space. There could be infrastructure there. There could be tunnels there. And we’re still looking into and we’ll give you more data as the hour moves ahead.”

"But you know that there are a lot of refugees, a lot of innocent civilians, men, women and children in that refugee camp as well, right?” Blitzer asked, pressing Hecht further.

“This is the tragedy of war, Wolf. I mean, we as you know, we’ve been saying for days, ‘Move south, civilians that are not involved with Hamas, please move south,’” Hecht responded.

“Just trying to get more information. You knew there were civilians there. You knew there were refugees, all sorts of refugees. But you decided to still drop a bomb on that refugee camp attempting to kill this Hamas commander. By the way, was he killed?” Blitzer continued.

“I can’t confirm yet. There’ll be more updates,” Hecht said of the civilian toll before addressing the commander's death.

“Yes, we know that he was killed and about the civilians there. We’re doing everything we can to minimize. I’ll tell you again, sadly, they are hiding themselves within the civilian population. And again, we are doing this stage by stage and we’re going to go after every one of these terrorists who was involved in that hideous attack on the 7th of October, Wolf,” Hecht added.

The Gaza Health Ministry, which is run by Hamas, and the director of Gaza's Indonesian Hospital said hundreds of people were killed or injured in the attack, the Washington Post reports. Palestinians carried away the injured and dead on blankets and mattresses, and the series of strikes left a deep crater in the area and toppled buildings.

A spokesperson for the Palestinian Civil Defense emergency services, Mahmoud Bassal, told the Post that about 20 buildings were destroyed by the blasts. The precise count of those wounded and dead was not immediately clear amid ongoing rescue efforts.

Tuesday's attack reinforced fears that Israel's use of airstrikes and ground operations will put more civilians in the territory at a higher risk and worsen an already extreme humanitarian crisis.

Though aid convoys have maintained a limited delivery of much-needed supplies, the deliveries fall short of satisfying growing demands. Egypt has been prepping hospitals to treat wounded Gazans, but a stalemate in border negotiations has kept wounded people from crossing.

In a potential turning point, Hamas and Egypt said Tuesday that an agreement was brokered to allow 81 injured people from the territory to pass on Wednesday through the Rafah border, which is the only official route from Gaza that Israel does not control.

Israel's expanding push into Gaza has also become a point of contention for allies like the United States, which has asserted Israel's right to retaliate after the Oct. 7 Hamas attack that killed at least 1,400 Israeli civilians and soldiers but has increasingly pushed for ways to help civilians caught in the war. Secretary of State Antony Blinken, during a Senate hearing in Washington, D.C. Tuesday, said “humanitarian pauses must be considered.”

António Guterres, the secretary general of the United Nations, said in a statement that he was “deeply alarmed by the intensification of the conflict.” International humanitarian law “is not an a la carte menu and cannot be applied selectively," he added.

Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., admonished Israel and said its attack on the Jabalya refugee camp is "horrible" in a post to X, formerly Twitter.

"Israel has an obligation to protect civilians under the laws of war," Warren wrote. "Hamas’s use of innocent Palestinians as human shields does not excuse bombing a location filled with civilians."

"This is a war crime," Rep. Cori Bush, D-Mo., tweeted of the attack. "This unspeakable violence must end. The U.S. government cannot keep funding these atrocities. There must be a #CeasefireNOW."

"Make no mistake: these human rights abuses are being carried out with U.S. weapons, U.S. funding, and with 'no red lines,'" added Rep. Ilhan Omar, D-Minn. "And now we are set to vote on an additional $14 billion with no restrictions or conditions. The United States Congress should not fund violations of U.S. and international law."

The director of the New York office of the U.N.'s human rights agency declared his retirement in a sharply worded letter pertaining to the war this week, according to the New York Times, accusing the U.N. of abandoning its principles and international law while failing to stop Israel's bombardment of the territory, which he called a "genocide."

"I write at a moment of great anguish for the world, including for many of our colleagues," Craig Mokhiber, the former director and a human rights lawyer, wrote in the Oct. 28-dated letter. "Once again, we are seeing a genocide unfolding before our eyes, and the Organization that we serve appears powerless to stop it.”

In the letter, which the U.N. confirmed was authentic, Mokhiber accused the U.S. and UK governments and much of Europe of being "complicit," describing Israel's offensive in Gaza and the West Bank — which has killed at least 8,500 Palestinians, including more than 3,500 children since Oct. 7 per the Gaza Ministry of Health, and damaged medical facilities, mosques, schools and residences — as "a textbook case of genocide."

He addressed the letter to Volker Türk, the U.N. high commissioner for human rights, who has called for an immediate ceasefire and criticized Israel for blockading Gaza and deploying airstrikes on the territory. Mokhiber, who has spent four decades investigating Palestinian human rights violations and genocides against the Tutsis, Bosnian Muslims, the Yazidi and the Rohingya for the U.N., further accused key parts of the organization of having "surrendered" to pressure from the U.S., the body's top donor,  and for fearing the "Israel Lobby."

In response to the letter, the spokeswoman for the U.N. human rights agency, Laura Gelbert Delgado, said on Tuesday, "These are the personal views of a staff member who retires today. The position of the Office is reflected in its public reporting and statements.”

Want a daily wrap-up of all the news and commentary Salon has to offer? Subscribe to our morning newsletter, Crash Course.

The Carter Center, founded by Jimmy Carter, the only U.S. president to call Israel's policies in Palestine apartheid, and former First Lady Rosalynn Carter, on Tuesday echoed international calls for a ceasefire in Gaza as the number of Palestinians killed in Israeli attacks since Oct. 7 reached 8,525, per Common Dreams.

The organization, which was established to champion and fight for human rights globally, quoted the humanitarian and Democratic politician in its statement: "We will not learn to live together in peace by killing each other's children."

"We urge all parties to agree to a ceasefire," the Carter Center added. "We ask for the opening of humanitarian corridors into Gaza and the reinstatement of essential services to the area. We urge the immediate, safe return of all hostages, and we call on both sides to abide by international law."

The Center's call for the ceasefire came as a U.N. official cautioned that Gaza has devolved into a "graveyard" for children since Israel instituted the blockade, which cut access to fuel, electricity, water and food, and began its offensive attacks.

"Hamas is responsible for the horrific October 7 massacre of more than 1,400 innocent people in Israel and the taking of more than 200 hostages," the Carter Center said. "And the innocent people of Gaza are now unfairly suffering from the ongoing conflict and the acute humanitarian crisis that has unfolded."

"Collective punishment is contrary to international law," the organization continued. "So is the murder of civilians."

Hamas on Saturday called on Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to agree to an exchange of the Israeli civilians the group took hostage when it launched its surprise attack and the Palestinians being held in Israeli prisons. Family members of some of the Israeli hostages have echoed that call.

Netanyahu, however — boosted by the Biden administration and U.S. politicians, including former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton — has rebuffed calls for a ceasefire, which UNICEF said on Tuesday could save the lives of 1,000 children in Gaza in just 72 hours.

"The violence must stop now," the Carter Center said. "There is no military solution to this crisis, only a political one that acknowledges the common humanity of both Israelis and Palestinians, respects the human rights of all, and creates a path for both societies to live side by side in peace."

Since the start of the conflict, the U.N. has received widespread criticism from both Israel and Palestinians for what has been described as an inadequate response to the war, whether that be for not being clear enough about Israel's right to defend itself against Hamas or for not being able to protect Palestinian civilians in Gaza while the death toll mounts and thousands are displaced.

The U.S. government's stance on the conflict and steadfast support of Israel has also garnered mounting national pushback as more Americans call for a ceasefire in the region.

A majority of Americans, both Democrat and Republican, believe the U.S. government should push for a ceasefire between Israel and Hamas, according to a Data for Progress poll conducted between Oct. 18 and 19 finding that 66 percent support that move.

While Democrats were the most in favor at 80 percent, the majority of Republicans and independents also supported a ceasefire at 56 percent and 57 percent, respectively.

MSNBC host Chris Hayes noted Tuesday that, despite the results of the poll showing that overwhelming public support for the move, “calling for a ceasefire is still a distinctly minority opinion inside Congress as a whole.”

“There’s only 18 members of Congress that have signed on to a resolution calling for a ceasefire. All of them are Democrats,” Hayes said, according to Mediaite, adding, “It does seem at least more popular with the American public than members of Congress.”.

Wolf Blitzer Presses Israeli Officer on Refugee Camp Bombing: ‘You Knew There Were Civilians There?’

Sharon Knolle
Tue, October 31, 2023 


CNN’s  sounded incredulous as he spoke with Israel military spokesman Lt. Col. Richard Hecht on Tuesday about the bombing of a refugee camp in Gaza that took out a senior Hamas official, but also according to local reports killed at least 50 people.

In a excerpt from the interview shared to social media, Blitzer tried to clarify the Israel Defense Forces’ strategy.

“But even if that Hamas commander was there, amidst all those Palestinian refugees who are in there in that Jabalya refugee camp, Israel still went ahead and dropped a bomb there attempting to kill this Hamas commander, knowing that a lot of innocent civilians, men, women and children presumably would be killed,” Blitzer asked Hecht. “Is that what I’m hearing?”

The Times of Israel reported on Tuesday that the bombing killed Ibrahim Biari, who took part in the horrific Oct. 7 terror attack on Israel. The bombing also killed “several other terrorists and caused underground terror tunnels to collapse, bringing down several nearby buildings.”

According to the BBC, as many as 120 people may have been killed and up to 400 wounded in the strike.

Hecht initially implied to Blitzer as the CNN anchor pressed the Israeli officer that they were not aware of the presence of innocent civilians before reiterating Israel had warned residents to evacuate northern Gaza while calling the bombing “the tragedy of war.”

“That’s not what you’re hearing Wolf,” Hecht replied. “Again, we were focused on the commander, who you’ll get the data on who this man was, who killed many many Israelis. We’re doing everything we can. It’s a very complicated battle space. — the infrastructure there, the tunnels there. We’re still looking into it and will give you more data as the hour moves ahead.”

Watch video of the CNN interview below.

The post Wolf Blitzer Presses Israeli Officer on Refugee Camp Bombing: ‘You Knew There Were Civilians There?’ (Video) appeared first on TheWrap.

Photos reveal scale of devastation after deadly Israeli airstrike on Gaza refugee camp

Bel Trew and Maira Butt
Tue, October 31, 2023 

Photos reveal scale of devastation after deadly Israeli airstrike on Gaza refugee camp


More than 50 Palestinians have been killed and over 150 wounded in Israeli airstrikes on the Jabaliya refugee camp in northern Gaza, the director of Gaza’s Indonesian Hospital has said. He told Al Jazeera he feared the numbers would rise after several residential buildings were destroyed in the bombardment.

The Israel Defence Forces admitted carrying out the strikes saying it had targeted Hamas infrastructure “that had taken over civilian buildings” but claimed those killed were Hamas militants.

Hamas spokesperson Hazem Qassem denied the IDF’s claim, saying it was trying to justify “its heinous crime” against civilians.

Palestinians search for survivors at the site of Israeli strikes on houses in the Jabaliya refugee camp (Reuters)

The blast comes as the Palestinian border authority said late on Tuesday that the Rafah crossing will be opened on Wednesday to allow 81 severely injured Palestinians to be treated in Egyptian hospitals.

Photographs from the scene show the devastation caused by the attack with civilians digging through rubble to recover the dead and wounded.

Mohammed Hawajreh, a nurse with Doctors Without Borders, told The Independent: “Young children arrived at the hospital with deep wounds and severe burns.

“They came without their families. Many were screaming and asking for their parents. I stayed with them until we could find a place, as the hospital was full with patients.”

Several residential buildings were flattened by the strikes (Reuters)

In a statement late on Tuesday night, the Ministry of Health in Gaza warned that the Shifa Medical Complex and the Indonesian Hospital, which are treating the wounded from the Jabaliya strike, were hours away from shutting down as fuel runs out.

It said: “We send a distress call to countries around the world to save 42 children under life support in incubators, 62 wounded and patients under artificial respiration, 650 patients with kidney failure, hundreds of operations in operating rooms, and other patients and wounded.

“We appeal to all gas station owners and our people who have any quantity of fuel or know a place with fuel to supply it to al-Shifa Medical Complex and Indonesian Hospital to save the lives of the wounded and sick.”

As the battle inside Palestinian territory intensifies, Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu has dismissed international calls for a halt to the fighting, which has been raging since Hamas launched attacks on 7 October, killing 1,400 people, according to Israeli authorities.

More than 50 people have been killed with more feared to be under the rubble (Reuters)

The Palestinian Ministry of Health reports 8,525 people have been killed, including 3,542 children, in what charity Save the Children says has surpassed the number of children killed in all conflicts since 2019. Almost 1,000 children are missing, according to the charity.

The rapidly mounting death toll has drawn calls from the international community, including the US – Israel’s biggest ally, for a pause to the fighting to allow humanitarian aid through.

Israel has sealed off Gaza and refuses to allow in food, fuel and medical supplies least, it says, they be used by Hamas to wage war.

The US secretary of state Antony Blinken, speaking in Washington, stressed the importance of both security assistance for Israel and humanitarian aid for Palestinians in Gaza.

“Without swift and sustained humanitarian relief, the conflict is much more likely to spread, suffering will grow, and Hamas and its sponsors will benefit by fashioning themselves as the saviours of the very desperation they created,” he said.

A World Health Organisation official said that “a public health catastrophe” is imminent in Gaza.

Jabaliya is one of the most densely populated areas in Gaza (Reuters)

Mounds of rubble were seen following the deadly strike (Reuters)

Airstrikes on Monday night outside the Indonesian Hospital in northern Gaza caused a power cut and doctors said they feared for the lives of 250 injured Palestinians being treated there as fuel runs low.

“Running out of fuel would mean no power and no power would mean the inevitable death of many patients,” Dr Moaeen Al-Masri said.

James Elder, a spokesperson for the UN children’s agency in Geneva, warned of the risk of infant deaths due to dehydration. Children in Gaza were getting sick from drinking salty water, he said.

Smoke billows over flattened buildings in Jabaliya (Reuters)

“Protection of civilians on both sides is paramount and must be respected at all times,” the UN chief said in a statement. “International humanitarian law establishes clear rules that cannot be ignored. It is not an a la carte menu and cannot be applied selectively.”

About 940 children are reported missing in Gaza, he said, with some thought to be stuck beneath the rubble of buildings flattened by Israeli airstrikes.

Significantly fewer humanitarian aid trucks than are needed have so far reached the besieged enclave, UN officials said. Aid trucks have been trickling into Gaza from Egypt over the past week via Rafah, the main crossing that does not border Israel.


People in Gaza share what life is like amid bombardment of Israel-Hamas war: 'We're all humans'

MORGAN WINSOR, BRANDON BAUR, ZOE MAGEE, DESIREE ADIB and DRAGANA JOVANOVIC
Thu, November 2, 2023 


An Israeli fighter jet roared overhead as it dropped a bomb near where Lena Beseiso and her family were hunkered down in the war-torn Gaza Strip.

The 57-year-old Palestinian-American citizen, who has been trapped there for weeks, is now no stranger to the sound of explosions, but the thunderous bang still startled her.

"Right now, the skies above are full of F-16s," Beseiso told ABC News in a series of audio messages on Monday. "It's truly frightening. This is 24/7 and it gets intense at times. They get more vicious."


Beseiso, a Utah resident, said she hadn't been back to Gaza in 12 years when she traveled there in late March with her husband, two of her daughters and a 10-year-old grandson to visit relatives. While there, one of her daughter's passports expired and she said they were unable to obtain a renewal from the U.S. Embassy in Jerusalem before Gaza's militant rulers, Hamas, launched a terror attack on neighboring Israel on Oct. 7.

"We've been abandoned," she added. "My country should be getting us back home safely. What is everyone waiting for? For us to be another number, another name?"

MORE: Israel-Hamas conflict: Timeline and key developments

When asked for comment about Beseiso's situation, a U.S. Embassy spokesperson told ABC News on Wednesday: "Due to privacy considerations, we are not able to comment on specific cases, but we have made thousands of phone calls and sent thousands of emails to U.S. citizens in Gaza, their immediate family members, and their loved ones who are inquiring with us on their behalf."

Beseiso was on Thursday among the hundreds of Americans who would be allowed to enter Egypt through the border crossing in the south, according to a list released by Egyptian authorities.

It's the latest outbreak of war between Israel and Hamas. The Palestinian militant group, which the United States has designated a terrorist organization, carried out an unprecedented incursion from Gaza into neighboring southern Israel by air, land and sea on Oct. 7, killing over 1,400 people and taking more than 200 others hostage, according to the Israel Defense Forces (IDF).

In response to the attack, the Israeli military has carried out wide-scale airstrikes on Gaza, killing more than 9,000 and destroying thousands of homes, according to the Hamas-run Ministry of Health. In recent days, the Israeli military has also sent ground troops into Gaza while gradually expanding its operations there. Unlike Israel, Gaza has no air raid sirens or bomb shelters.


PHOTO: People check the rubble of buildings destroyed in an Israeli strike on the Bureij refugee camp in the central Gaza Strip on November 2, 2023, as battles between Israel and the Palestinian Hamas movement continue. 
( (Mahmud Hams/AFP via Getty Images)

Gaza, a 140-square-mile territory, is home to more than 2 million Palestinians who have lived under a blockade imposed by Israel and supported by Egypt since Hamas seized power in 2007. Human rights organizations have long described the densely populated strip as the world's largest open-air prison, due to Israel's generalized ban on travel for Gaza residents as well as Egypt's restrictive policies at its shared border.

Beseiso said she and her family have been sheltering in southern Gaza for weeks after heeding warnings from the Israeli military to evacuate the north. The part of the 140-square-mile territory that shares a border with Egypt is in the south. But, like so many others, they have been unable to leave Gaza and enter neighboring Egypt through the Rafah border crossing in the south.

"I swear, Hamas is not the one that's not allowing us to leave. They don't even care," Beseiso told ABC News. "We went to the border four times and we were able to travel, but we couldn't go through because Egypt had closed the gate and kept it closed. And as we would be there, Rafah crossing would get bombed by the IDF."

"There are no Hamas or Palestinian officials there," she added. "I have not seen one gunman in the streets or even at the border."

MORE: 'Freaks me out': Americans say they are trapped in Gaza

However, U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken has cited Hamas as the only hurdle blocking the exit of foreign nationals from Gaza.

"The impediment is simple: It's Hamas," Blinken said during a Senate hearing on Tuesday. "We've not yet found a way to get them out by whatever -- through whatever place and by whatever means that Hamas is not blocking, but we're working that with intermediaries."

The Rafah crossing opened on Wednesday, allowing some foreign nationals and injured Gaza residents to exit the enclave for the first time since Oct. 7.

When asked about bombing southern Gaza, where people had been told to move, the IDF has said it is making efforts to minimize civilian casualties and that its airstrikes are precise and aimed at Hamas targets.

It's the nighttime that is most "fearful" for Beseiso because she said they "don't know what's going on." Gaza relies on Israel and fuel imports for its power and, since Oct. 7, Israel has cut off electricity and fuel supplies to the Hamas-run enclave. Much of Gaza is currently without power or internet and the Hamas-controlled Ministry of Health has said that fuel is running dangerously low. Israeli authorities, however, have accused Hamas of stockpiling fuel and have so far prevented humanitarian organizations from delivering more.

"No one should have to live in this type of situation. It's just evil," Beseiso told ABC News. "We're all humans. No one should have to live in fear."


PHOTO: Palestinians run for cover after a strike near the Al-Shifa hospital in Gaza City, Gaza Strip, on Nov. 1, 2023, amid a war between the territory's militant rulers, Hamas, and neighboring Israel. 
(Bashar Taleb/AFP via Getty Images)

Omar Alnajjar, a 26-year-old Palestinian who lives in Gaza, said telephone and internet connections were completely cut on Friday night. The communications blackout lasted for about 48 hours, according to Ainajjar, who works as a project manager for Save Youth Future Society, an independent nonprofit investing in creating opportunities for Palestinian youth in Gaza.

He said his house has some solar energy that allowed him to at least charge his phone and he used a radio to listen to the news, but he said the signal was interrupted by Israeli military drones.

"All we wanted to hear and we seek to hear during these 48 hours on the radio is a cease-fire," Alnajjar told ABC News in a video message on Tuesday. "But nothing happened."

"The only thing [that has] changed is the intensity and the crazy bombing," he added.

Abood Okal, a 36-year-old Palestinian-American citizen and Massachusetts resident, was also visiting family in Gaza with his wife and 1-year-old when the war began. They have been stranded there ever since.

"We've run out of drinking water yesterday," Okal told ABC News in an audio message on Monday. "A desalination station that's nearby, that we've been relying on has run out of fuel to run the generators."

MORE: State Department struggles to explain why American citizens still can't exit Gaza

He said he and his family "roamed the main roads and streets" of the city of Rafah in southern Gaza, where they have been staying, to look for trucks or horse-drawn carts carrying tanks filled with drinking water taken from one of the very few desalination stations that are still operational there.

"We stood in line; I think it was for maybe about two hours to fill one gallon," he said. "We're hoping that would last us for the rest of the day today and for most of tomorrow until we could find another place to get drinking water from."

As of Wednesday, less than 300 trucks carrying humanitarian aid, such as food and medical supplies, have been allowed to enter Gaza via the Rafah border crossing since Oct. 7 -- a fraction of the quantity needed, according to the Egyptian and Palestinian Red Crescent societies.

Okal said he has noticed "an increase in artillery shelling" near the eastern side of Rafah where they are sheltering in a house with dozens of others.

"Every once in a while, we would hear heavy caliber gunfire that we believe is fired from tanks," he added. "Our biggest fear now is that the ground invasion is imminent near the neighborhoods where we are."

ABC News' Camilla Alcini, Shannon Crawford and Somayeh Malekian contributed to this report.

People in Gaza share what life is like amid bombardment of Israel-Hamas war: 'We're all humans' originally appeared on abcnews.go.com



Gaza evacuees crossing into Egypt fear for those left behind

Reuters
Updated Thu, November 2, 2023 

RAFAH, Gaza (Reuters) -People hoping to leave the Gaza Strip converged on the Rafah crossing to Egypt on Thursday, with those whose names were on a list vetted by Israel gradually passing through while others held up their foreign passports in vain.

The crossing was open for limited evacuations for a second day under a Qatar-brokered deal between Israel, Egypt, Hamas and the United States, aimed at letting some foreign passport holders and their dependents, and some wounded Gazans, out of the besieged enclave.

"I'm not even excited to leave Gaza because we have so many people that we love and care about," said Suzan Beseiso, a U.S. citizen with relatives in Gaza, where she had spent several months.

"Right now I'm between ice and fire. I don't know if I'm ever going to be able to see the family I left behind or the friends I left behind. People are dying. Everybody's dying. Nobody's safe. We don't have bomb shelters," she said.

The Palestinian border authority published what appeared to be the list of those approved to leave on Thursday. It included 596 names, classified by country, all checked by Israel.

"Israel has been vetting everyone leaving Gaza through Egypt to ensure there are no Hamas operatives getting out," said Colonel Elad Goren of COGAT, an Israeli Defence Ministry agency that liaises with the Palestinians on civilian affairs.

There were 15 countries on the list. Those with the largest number of names were the United States with 400, Belgium with 50, Greece, 24, Croatia, 23, the Netherlands, 20, and Sri Lanka, 17. The United States said late on Thursday that 79 of its nationals had left.

Those not authorised to cross to Egypt expressed their desperation to escape from densely populated Gaza, which has been under a total blockade and continuous Israeli bombardment for almost four weeks.

Ghada el-Saka, an Egyptian national who was visiting relatives in Gaza when the war started and the crossing was closed, wept and cried out in frustration as she waited in a holding area on the Gaza side of the Rafah crossing with her weeping daughter, holding up her Egyptian passport.

"Why are you leaving us in this destruction? We've seen death with our own eyes," she said, her voice rising with emotion as tears streamed down her face.

Saka said she had been staying with siblings but the house had been damaged by an Israeli strike that hit a nearby house, and she and her daughter had been living on the street, while her other children were in Egypt.

"I want to pass. We are not animals. I have Egyptian rights, we are Egyptian," she said.

REALITY WORSE THAN TV

Nabih Ayad, lawyer for U.S. citizens Zakaria and Laila Alarayshi who had travelled to Gaza before the war to visit relatives, said 62-year-old Zakaria Alarayshi had multiple health problems and had been cleared to leave but would not do so without his wife, who was not included on the list.

"They're in an absolutely horrific situation," Ayad said. "My client is drinking saltwater. They're losing hope day by day."

Wounded Palestinians evacuated by ambulance were receiving care in Egyptian hospitals, including the one at Al Arish, on the coast of Sinai about 50 km (30 miles) from Rafah. Several were accompanied by relatives who waited outside the hospital.

Among them was Tamer al-Daghmeh, who said his brother had lost his right leg in an Israeli strike.

"He was in intensive care for three days. They requested urgent transfer to Egypt," said Daghmeh.

Israel's Goren said 51 Palestinians in need of medical care had left Gaza for Egypt on Wednesday. He did not give a figure for Thursday.

For people on the official list, the evacuation process appeared orderly, with a series of checks on both sides of the Rafah crossing. Relief was tempered by mixed emotions.

"I want to say that what is aired on TV is just 5% of what we go through in reality," said Shams Shaath, a U.S. passport holder whose name appeared on the list.

"We've seen people displaced, children who lost their parents, burnt and decapitated bodies. I'm one of the people who lost their houses," he said.

Egypt's foreign ministry said nearly 7,000 people holding nationalities of more than 60 countries were expected to leave. Diplomatic sources said the process may take up to two weeks.

The latest war in the decades-old conflict began when Hamas fighters broke through Gaza's border with Israel on Oct. 7. Israel says they killed 1,400 people, mostly civilians, and took more than 200 hostages in the deadliest day of its 75-year history.

Israel's ensuing bombardment of the small Palestinian enclave of 2.3 million people has killed at least 9,061 people, including 3,760 children, according to health authorities in Gaza, which is run by Hamas.

Harrowing images of bodies in the rubble and hellish conditions inside Gaza have triggered appeals for restraint and street protests around the world.

Ceasefire needed to allow humanitarian aid to reach all war victims in Gaza | Opinion

William Lambers
Cincinnati.com | The Enquirer
Thu, November 2, 2023 

An aerial view shows humanitarian aid trucks arriving from Egypt after having crossed through the Rafah border crossing arriving at a storage facility in Khan Yunis in the southern Gaza Strip on Saturday.

A ceasefire in the Israel-Hamas war is desperately needed to allow humanitarian aid into the Gaza Strip of Palestine, which is facing catastrophic conditions. The war has claimed thousands of Israeli and Palestinian lives since the Hamas militant group launched terror attacks in Israel on Oct. 7. Israel responded by attacking neighboring Gaza, where Hamas is based.

Civilians in Gaza are in danger of bombs and starvation as Israel continues its assault. Palestinian civilians are being displaced from their homes and suffering from shortages of food, water, medicine and other basic supplies.

On Oct. 24, the UN reported the highest single-day death toll in Gaza. A total of 704 Palestinians, including 305 children, were killed. Most of the Palestinian casualties are women and children.

Sean Callahan, the president of Catholic Relief Services, said, "The situation of civilians in Gaza is extremely alarming and desperate, and we need to act now to prevent a total humanitarian catastrophe."

There must be a ceasefire to allow aid to reach all war victims. President Joe Biden brokered an agreement between Egypt and Israel to allow humanitarian aid into Gaza. But these aid deliveries are nowhere near enough given the size of the emergency and the ongoing conflict.

"There needs to be a sustained halt to the violence. Aid cannot be distributed under the bombs. Time is not a luxury the people of Gaza have," said Hiba Tibi, West Bank and Gaza Country Director for CARE.

A joint statement from UN relief agencies, including the World Food Program and UNICEF, said: "We call for a humanitarian ceasefire, along with immediate, unrestricted humanitarian access throughout Gaza to allow humanitarian actors to reach civilians in need, save lives and prevent further human suffering. Flows of humanitarian aid must be at scale and sustained, and allow all Gazans to preserve their dignity."

Save the Children and other charities are also calling for a ceasefire immediately. A ceasefire is needed for humanitarian aid deliveries and to allow peace talks to end the conflict between Israel and Palestine. There must be the safe return of all Israeli hostages taken by Hamas during the Oct. 7 terror attacks in Israel.

War is not the road to peace between Israel and Palestine. Decades of conflict have proven that. War always leads to more war. Only diplomacy, backed by robust humanitarian aid, can lead to peace between Israel and Palestine.

Distribution of medical aid and medicines to Nasser Medical Hospital in the city of Khan Yunis, south of the Gaza Strip, which recently arrived through the Rafah crossing on October 23, 2023 in Khan Yunis, Gaza. Two weeks after a deadly Hamas attack in southern Israel that sparked a retaliatory siege of Gaza, in which thousands have died and hundreds of thousands have been displaced, aid trucks have started entering the Palestinian territory via Egypt carrying food, water and medicines. The UN agency UNRWA, or the Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees, says the initial aid is a "drop in the ocean" of what is needed.

The United States must lead efforts to get the ceasefire and to increase the humanitarian aid.

Hospitals in Gaza are overwhelmed with casualties. The war is also leading to a hunger crisis. The UN World Food Program needs access as well as increased funding. The WFP has been short on funds for its relief operation in Palestine all year, even being forced to cut rations in Gaza this summer. Now as the war erupts, food shortages are worsening.

WFP states in its latest Palestine report, "As needs are soaring, WFP is revising its needs upwards and estimates that it will require at least USD 100 million for the next 90 days to sustain its emergency response to over 1 million affected people at pace and scale."

War always leads to hunger. Right now a ceasefire is needed to save civilians from bombs and starvation.

Everyone can be advocate for a ceasefire to save Gaza. Write to President Biden urging diplomacy to get the ceasefire and peace talks started. You can support humanitarian relief agencies by donating and encouraging Congress to increase funding for food and other humanitarian aid.

We must break the vicious cycle of violence between Israel and Palestine. Diplomacy, backed with humanitarian aid for everyone in need, is the only road to peace in the Middle East.

William Lambers of Delhi Township is an author who partnered with the UN World Food Program on the book "Ending World Hunger."

Israel says it has encircled Gaza City; UN team talks of 'grave risk of genocide'


Updated Thu, November 2, 2023 
By Nidal al-Mughrabi and Dan Williams

GAZA/JERUSALEM (Reuters) - Israeli forces on Thursday encircled Gaza City - the Gaza Strip's main city - in their assault on Hamas, the military said, but the Palestinian militant group resisted their drive with hit-and-run attacks from underground tunnels.

The city in the north of the Gaza Strip has become the focus of attack for Israel, which has vowed to annihilate the Islamist group's command structure and has told civilians to flee to the south.

"We're at the height of the battle. We've had impressive successes and have passed the outskirts of Gaza City. We are advancing," Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said in a statement. He gave no further details.

Amid heavy explosions in Gaza, Israeli military spokesperson Rear Admiral Daniel Hagari told reporters his country's "troops completed the encirclement of Gaza City, which is the focal point of the Hamas terror organization."

Brigadier General Iddo Mizrahi, chief of Israel's military engineers, said troops were encountering mines and booby traps.

"Hamas has learned and prepared itself well," he said.

Abu Ubaida, spokesperson for the armed wing of Hamas, said in a televised speech on Thursday that Israel's death toll in Gaza was much higher than the military had announced. "Your soldiers will return in black bags," he said.

Israel has said it has lost 18 soldiers and killed dozens of militants since ground operations expanded on Friday.

Hamas and allied Islamic Jihad fighters were emerging from tunnels to fire at tanks, then disappearing back into the network, residents said and videos from both groups showed.

In one Hamas military video, a fighter surfaces in a Gaza field and places an explosive device on a tank. An explosion is audible as the fighter, who appears to be wearing a body camera to document the incident, sprints back to the tunnel and fires an anti-tank missile toward the tank.

There was no letup in the suffering of Palestinian civilians, with U.N. experts saying they were at "grave risk of genocide".

Palestinian civilians have suffered shortages of food, fuel, drinking water and medicine.

"Water is being used as a weapon of war," said Juliette Touma, a spokesperson for the U.N. agency for Palestinian refugees UNRWA.

'WE ARE GETTING SICK'

In Khan Younis, in the south of the Gaza Strip, nine-year-old Rafif Abu Ziyada said she was drinking dirty water and getting stomach pains and headaches.

"There is no cooking gas, there is no water, we don't eat well. We are getting sick," she said. "There's garbage on the ground and the whole place is polluted."

U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken left for the Middle East after saying he would discuss concrete steps to minimise harm to civilians in Gaza.

Over a third of Gaza's 35 hospitals are not functioning, with many turned into impromptu refugee camps.

"The situation is beyond catastrophic," said the charity Medical Aid for Palestinians, describing packed corridors and many medics who were themselves bereaved and homeless.

"We remain convinced that the Palestinian people are at grave risk of genocide," seven U.N. special rapporteurs said in a statement in Geneva.

"We demand a humanitarian ceasefire to ensure that aid reaches those who need it the most."

U.S. national security spokesperson John Kirby said on Thursday that temporary, localized humanitarian pauses would not prevent Israel from defending itself.

"What we're trying to do is explore the idea of as many pauses as might be necessary to continue to get aid out and to continue to work to get people out safely, including hostages," he told reporters at a briefing.

In his meetings in Israel and Jordan on Friday, Blinken said he would also discuss the future of Gaza and laying the groundwork for future Palestinian statehood.

The latest war in the decades-old conflict began when Hamas fighters broke through the border on Oct. 7. Israel says they killed 1,400 people, mostly civilians, and took more than 240 hostages in the deadliest day of its 75-year-old history.

Israel's ensuing bombardment of the small Palestinian enclave of 2.3 million people has killed at least 9,061 people, according to Gaza health authorities.

'WE ARE NOT ANIMALS'


The Rafah crossing from Gaza to Egypt was opened for limited evacuations for a second day under a Qatari-brokered deal aimed at letting some foreign passport holders, their dependents and some wounded Gazans out of the enclave.

Palestinian border official Wael Abu Mehsen said 400 foreign citizens would leave for Egypt via the Rafah crossing on Thursday, after some 320 on Wednesday.

Dozens of critically injured Palestinians were to cross too. Israel asked foreign countries to send hospital ships for them.

"I want to pass. We are not animals," said Ghada el-Saka, an Egyptian at Rafah waiting to return home after visiting relatives. "We've seen death with our own eyes," she added, describing a strike near her siblings' house that had forced her and her daughter into the street.

Suzan Beseiso, a U.S. citizen with relatives in Gaza, said she was not excited to leave Gaza "because we have so many people that we love and care about".

"Right now I'm between ice and fire. I don't know if I'm ever going to be able to see the family I left behind or the friends I left behind. People are dying. Everybody's dying. Nobody's safe."

Gaza border officials said the Rafah crossing would reopen on Friday for evacuations.

Egypt's foreign ministry said nearly 7,000 nationals of more than 60 countries were expected to leave, and diplomatic sources said the process may take up to two weeks.

In central Gaza, an air strike destroyed clusters of houses in the Bureij refugee camp, residents and Gaza officials said, with 15 bodies pulled from the rubble.

"A massacre, a massacre," people cried as they gathered corpses in blankets.

Israel was talking to medical agencies about setting up field hospitals in the southern part of the Gaza Strip, an Israeli official said on Thursday.

Israel's latest strikes have included the heavily populated area of Jabalia, set up as a refugee camp in 1948.

Gaza's Hamas-run media office said at least 195 Palestinians were killed in the two hits on Tuesday and Wednesday, with 120 missing and at least 777 people hurt.

Israel, which accuses Hamas of hiding behind civilians, said it killed two Hamas commanders in Jabalia.

(Reporting by Nidal al-Mughrabi in Gaza, Ali Sawafta in Ramallah, Dan Williams, Emily Rose, Maytaal Angel in Jerusalem, Clauda Tanios in Dubai; additional reporting by Reuters bureaux worldwide; Writing by Stephen Coates, Andrew Cawthorne, Nick Macfie and Cynthia Osterman; Editing by Angus MacSwan and Howard Goller)


EVEN THE RIGHT WING GET IT

Why the war in Gaza could spawn Hamas 2.0 and spread terror into Europe
Charles Lister
Wed, November 1, 2023 

Houthi fighters take part in a military operation at the weekend in solidarity with the Palestinian people 
- EPA

Hamas’s brutal attack on Israel on Oct 7 has understandably been described as Israel’s “9/11” moment.

Leaving more than 1,400 people dead, it was in fact many times worse than al-Qaeda’s terror attacks in the US two decades ago. In the wake of those attacks in 2001, fuelled by a desire to destroy terrorist threats and assert strength on the international stage, the US invaded Afghanistan and later Iraq.

While those wars raged, eventually leaving at least 400,000 dead, the terrorism threat metastasised, growing in scale, scope and sophistication across the globe.

In the wake of Hamas’s attack, Israeli officials declared their intent to “eradicate” Hamas, declaring war on Gaza’s “human animals”. In six days, 6,000 bombs were dropped on Gaza, the most densely populated region of the world.

For comparison’s sake, at the most intense moments of the counter-ISIS campaign in Syria and Iraq in 2015 and 2016, an average of 2,500 bombs were dropped per month, in a territory 100 times larger than the Gaza Strip.

Three weeks later, according to the Hamas-controlled health ministry, more than 8,000 people lie dead in Gaza, 40 per cent of them children and 30 per cent women – 88 per cent of whom have been publicly identified.


Palestinians carry the bodies of Hamas fighters killed by Israeli forces on Monday -
 JAAFAR ASHTIYEH/AFP/GETTY IMAGES

Meanwhile, 63 per cent of Gaza’s population has been displaced and 15 per cent of all residential buildings destroyed, the UN says.

According to Save the Children, more children have been killed in the past three weeks than in every conflict zone in the world since 2019 – 99 per cent of them in Gaza.

While Israel’s aim is to “eradicate” Hamas, it is likely this scorched earth campaign could give birth to a Hamas 2.0 – something far more deeply rooted and more extreme.

The sheer brutality and indiscriminate nature of Hamas’s attack on Oct 7 gave rise to a now widespread claim that “Hamas = ISIS.” On social media, #HamasIsISIS” has been trending, while political leaders in Israel, the US and across Europe have all equated the two movements as one and the same.

A closer study of Hamas suggests such comments are misplaced. Hamas is a political Islamist movement whose activities are self-described as “resistance” and are based around an explicitly nationalist agenda. To ISIS, Hamas are apostates, worthy of death – plain and simple.

In Gaza, Hamas has routinely cracked down upon jihadist cells whose ideology is more extreme and global in nature, including ISIS. Next door in Syria, ISIS openly fought and killed opposition groups that had enjoyed Hamas support, labelling them unbelievers. Their violence may be similar, but as movements, they could not be more different.

Terrorism in general can never be “eradicated”, especially when a terrorist group has roots within a cause perceived more widely to be credible and just. ISIS had none of that – its ideological basis was unanimously condemned and the world mobilised to combat it.

Yet while Hamas does not in any way represent the Palestinian cause, Israel’s bombing campaign in Gaza risks legitimising Hamas’s narrative – that armed resistance is the only viable path forward. Populations across the Muslim world have taken to the streets, decrying the devastation in Gaza, something not seen in the region on such a scale for a long time.

Israel’s newly launched ground incursion will likely deal a powerful blow to Hamas, but the group will survive and could morph into something even more violent than before. Worse still, the intense Israeli response in Gaza and the profound sense of international disinterest in its costs to civilians risks engendering a whole new generation of terrorism across the Middle East and beyond.

Already, the FBI has indicated that ongoing violence in Gaza looks set to spawn the most significant domestic terrorism threat in years. That will be even more true in Europe.

As violence continues to escalate and Iranian-directed militants across the region continue to target American troops and Israel itself, pressure is beginning to build towards calls for de-escalation. Human rights groups meanwhile, are calling out inconsistencies in Western policy – unanimously condemning Russia’s targeting of residential buildings or Bashar al-Assad’s sieges in Syria, but turning a blind eye to similar events in Gaza.

The Palestinian issue used to be a potent rallying cry for jihadists the world over, but that fell away in recent years. Current events risk placing it right back at the forefront again, and this time around, it won’t be so locally contained.

Charles Lister is a senior fellow at the Middle East Institute

SEE

‘The Palestine exception’: why pro-Palestinian voices are suppressed in the US

Ocasio-Cortez rips pro-Israel group as ‘extremist organization’

Lauren Sforza

The Hill

Wed, November 1, 2023 

Ocasio-Cortez rips pro-Israel group as ‘extremist organization’


Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) blasted a pro-Israel group as an “extremist organization” Tuesday on social media.

Ocasio-Cortez responded to a post on X, formerly Twitter, by the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) that took aim at her and the nine others who voted against a resolution that expressed support for Israel and condemned the militant group Hamas’s attack against the country earlier this month.

She ripped the organization for targeting lawmakers of color and suggested the group is a threat to democracy in the U.S.

“AIPAC endorsed scores of Jan 6th insurrectionists,” she wrote on X. “They are no friend to American democracy. They are one of the more racist and bigoted PACs in Congress as well, who disproportionately target members of color. They are an extremist organization that destabilizes US democracy.”

AIPAC responded to the New York Democrat’s remarks on X, pushing back her claims that the organization targets people of color.

“More of the same tired lies & spin,” the group wrote. “@AOC and the Squad summed up: People who disagree with us are racist. AIPAC stands with pro-Israel Democrats and Republicans of all races, genders, and backgrounds who support the US-Israel alliance. And we oppose those who don’t, like you.”

Rep. Mark Pocan (D-Wis.) echoed Ocasio-Cortez’s remarks on AIPAC, which also replied to Pocan’s criticism on X.

“Got to admit, this sums up how many feel about what @AIPAC really is about. Insurrectionists, WTF. No friend of democracy,” Pocan wrote on X in response to Ocasio-Cortez’s post.

“Got to admit, @MarkPocan is a hypocrite,” the organization responded. “Singling AIPAC out for doing the exact same thing PACs supporting him do. Surely, for the sake of consistency, he will condemn them too and return the six-figures he took from those PACs last cycle, right?”

The exchanges between AIPAC and the two House Democrats come just a day after Rep. Thomas Massie (R-Ky.) got in a heated back-and-forth with the group over its tweet criticizing the 10 lawmakers who voted against the Israel resolution last week.

“AIPAC always gets mad when I put America first,” he said in response to AIPAC’s tweet. “I won’t be voting for their $14+ billion shakedown of American taxpayers either. Let them know what you think by replying to their post. They are intentionally misrepresenting my intent and the resolution I voted against.”

House Republicans released a $14.3 billion aid package for Israel on Monday that includes cuts to funding for the IRS — a key detail that is already garnering opposition from Democrats and the White House


SEE

‘The Palestine exception’: why pro-Palestinian voices are suppressed in the US
Britain publishes 'Bletchley Declaration' on AI safety

Reuters
Wed, November 1, 2023 

AI Safety Summit in Bletchley

LONDON (Reuters) - Britain on Wednesday published a "Bletchley Declaration", agreed with countries including the United States and China, aimed at boosting global efforts to cooperate on artificial intelligence (AI) safety.

The declaration, by 28 countries and the European Union, was published on the opening day of the AI Safety Summit hosted at Bletchley Park, central England.

"The Declaration fulfils key summit objectives in establishing shared agreement and responsibility on the risks, opportunities and a forward process for international collaboration on frontier AI safety and research, particularly through greater scientific collaboration," Britain said in a separate statement accompanying the declaration.

The declaration encouraged transparency and accountability from actors developing frontier AI technology on their plans to measure, monitor and mitigate potentially harmful capabilities.

"This is a landmark achievement that sees the world's greatest AI powers agree on the urgency behind understanding the risks of AI – helping ensure the long-term future of our children and grandchildren," British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak said.

It set out a two-pronged agenda focused on identifying risks of shared concern and building the scientific understanding of them, and also building cross-country policies to mitigate them.

"This includes, alongside increased transparency by private actors developing frontier AI capabilities, appropriate evaluation metrics, tools for safety testing, and developing relevant public sector capability and scientific research," the declaration said.

(Reporting by William James, writing by Farouq Suleiman, Editing by Sachin Ravikumar)

Meta exec and former U.K. Deputy Prime Minister compares AI fears to past ‘moral panic’ over video games—and bicycles

Ryan Hogg
Wed, November 1, 2023 

Meta’s president of global affairs Nick Clegg

A Meta exec has moved to quell public fears about the capabilities of AI, calling it a “moral panic” akin to past fears about everything from video games to the bicycle.

Meta’s president of global affairs Nick Clegg warned against premature calls for regulation of the technology, the Times of London and the Guardian reported, speaking ahead of the landmark AI Summit being hosted at Bletchley Park in the U.K. The summit is expected focus on mitigating the potential harms of AI.

Elon Musk will speak with U.K. Prime Minister Rishi Sunak on Musk’s X platform about regulating AI. Major world leaders, including European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, will be in attendance.

The summit follows an executive order signed Monday by the Biden Administration, which will force tech companies to quickly develop strong safety standards for AI. Biden will not be attending the summit.

However, former U.K. Deputy Prime Minister Clegg will be one voice present in Bletchley Park seeking to downplay growing concerns about AI, from the technology’s potential to steal jobs to its ability to manipulate humans.

Clegg said there was a "Dutch auction" around the risks, with detractors trying to outdo each other with the most outlandish theories of AI going wrong.

“I remember the 80s. There was this moral panic about video games. There were moral panics about radio, the bicycle, the internet,” Clegg said at an event in London, the Times reported.

“Ten years ago we were being told that by now there would be no truck drivers left because all cars will be entirely automated. To my knowledge in the U.S., there’s now a shortage of truck drivers.”
AI’s risks

Clegg, who joined Meta following a nearly two-decade political career in the U.K., has been on a charm offensive supporting the development of AI. This approach has largely involved downplaying the technology’s risks, as well as its capabilities.

In July, Clegg told BBC’s Today radio program that large language models (LLM) like OpenAI’s ChatGPT and Google’s Bard were currently “quite stupid,” and fell “far short” of the level where they could develop autonomy.

In his role at Meta, Clegg is among a minority of tech execs unreservedly backing the potential for AI, pouring cold water on panic about the tech’s threats.

Meta made its own LLM, Llama 2, open source when it released it in July. The move was seen by proponents, including Meta, as one that would boost transparency and democratize information, preventing the tech from being gatekept by a few powerful companies.

However, detractors of the move worry that the information might be used by bad actors to proliferate AI’s harms. OpenAI went open source with its code when it first launched ChatGPT but soon backpedaled. The company’s co-founder Ilya Sutskever told The Verge in an interview that open-sourcing AI was “just not wise.” It might be a key discussion point at this week’s U.K. AI Summit.
Danger warnings

Other tech execs have been much more vocal about the wider risks of AI. In May, OpenAI co-founder Sam Altman penned a short letter alongside hundreds of other experts warning of the dangers of AI.

Musk and Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak were among 1,100 people who in March signed an open letter calling on a moratorium on the development of advanced AI systems.

However, Andrew Ng, one of the founding fathers of AI and co-founder of Google Brain, hinted that there might be ulterior motives behind tech companies’ warnings.

Ng taught OpenAI co-founder Sam Altman at Stanford and hinted his former student may be trying to consolidate an oligopoly of powerful tech companies controlling AI.

“Sam was one of my students at Stanford. He interned with me. I don’t want to talk about him specifically because I can’t read his mind, but… I feel like there are many large companies that would find it convenient to not have to compete with open-sourced large language models,” Ng said in an interview with the Australian Financial Review.

Ng warned proposed regulation of AI was likely to stifle innovation, and that no regulation was currently better than what was being proposed.

Geoffrey Hinton, a former Google engineer who quit to warn about AI’s dangers, questions Ng’s comments about an apparent conspiracy among tech companies to stifle competition.

“Andrew Ng is claiming that the idea that AI could make us extinct is a big-tech conspiracy. A datapoint that does not fit this conspiracy theory is that I left Google so that I could speak freely about the existential threat,” the so-called “Godfather of AI” posted on X, formerly Twitter.

This story was originally featured on Fortune.com


AI Doomers Take Center Stage at the UK’s AI Summit

Thomas Seal
Wed, November 1, 2023 



(Bloomberg) -- A fierce debate over how much to focus on the supposed existential risks of artificial intelligence defined the kickoff of the UK’s AI Safety Summit on Wednesday, highlighting broader tensions in the tech community as lawmakers propose regulations and safeguards.

Tech leaders and academics attending the Summit at Bletchley Park, the former home of secret World War II code-breakers, disagreed over whether to prioritize immediate risks from AI — such as fueling discrimination and misinformation — verses concerns that it could lead to the end of human civilization.

Some attendees openly worried so-called AI doomers would dominate the proceedings — a fear compounded by news that Elon Musk would appear alongside British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak shortly after the billionaire raised the specter of AI leading to “the extinction of humanity” on a podcast. On Wednesday, the UK government also unveiled the Bletchley Declaration, a communique signed by 28 countries warning of the potential for AI to cause “catastrophic harm.”

“I hope that it doesn’t get dominated by the doomer, X-risk, ‘Terminator’-scenario discourse, and I’ll certainly push the conversation towards practical, near-term harms,” said Aidan Gomez, co-founder and chief executive officer of AI company Cohere Inc., ahead of the summit.

Top tech executives spent the week trading rhetorical blows over the subject. Meta Platforms Inc.’s chief AI scientist Yann LeCun accused rivals, including DeepMind co-founder Demis Hassabis, of playing up existential risks of the technology in an attempt “to perform a regulatory capture” of the industry. Hassabis then hit back in an interview with Bloomberg on Wednesday, calling the criticisms preposterous.

On the summit’s fringes, Ciaran Martin, the former head of the UK’s National Cyber Security Center, said there’s “genuine debate between those who take a potentially catastrophic view of AI and those who take the view that it’s a series of individual, sometimes-serious problems, that need to be managed.”

“While the undertones of that debate are running through all of the discussions,” Martin said, “I think there’s an acceptance from virtually everybody that the international, public and private communities need to do both. It’s a question of degree.”

In closed-door sessions at the summit, there were discussions about whether to pause the development of next-generation “frontier” AI models and the “existential threat” this technology may pose “to democracy, human rights, civil rights, fairness, and equality,” according to summaries published by the British government late Wednesday.

Between seminars, Musk was “mobbed” and “held court” with delegates from tech companies and civil society, according to a diplomat. But during a session about the risks of losing control of AI, he quietly listened, according to another attendee, who said the seminar was nicknamed the “Group of Death.”

Matt Clifford, a representative of the UK Prime Minister who helped organize the summit, tried to square the circle and suggest the disagreement over AI risks wasn’t such a dichotomy.

“This summit’s not focused on long-term risk; this summit’s focused on next year’s models,” he told reporters on Wednesday. “How do we address potentially catastrophic risks — as it says in the Bletchley Declaration — from those models?” he said. “The ‘short term, long term’ distinction is very often overblown.”

By the end of the summit’s first day, there were some signs of a rapprochement between the two camps. Max Tegmark, a professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology who previously called to pause the development of powerful AI systems, said “this debate is starting to melt away.”

“Those who are concerned about existential risks, loss of control, things like that, realize that to do something about it, they have to support those who are warning about immediate harms,” he said, “to get them as allies to start putting safety standards in place.”

Bloomberg Businessweek



SEE

Countries at UK summit pledge to tackle AI's potentially 'catastrophic' risks

Tom Cruise’s ‘Mission: Impossible — Dead Reckoning’ Inspired President Biden to Bolster Security Against AI Threats

Bletchley Declaration: Nations sign agreement for safe and responsible AI advancement

'AI' named Collins Word of the Year

Rishi Sunak first world leader to say AI poses threat to humanity

Historic UK codebreaking base to host ‘world first’ AI safety summithttps://plawiuk.blogspot.com/2023/08/balanced-scorecard-positives-and.html

The case for taking AI seriously as a threat to humanity
Why some people fear AI, explained.


Panama Congress Backs Repealing First Quantum Mine Contract


Michael McDonald and James Attwood
Thu, November 2, 2023



(Bloomberg) -- Panamanian lawmakers voted to repeal a new contract with First Quantum Minerals Ltd. Wednesday in the second of three required votes, adding to uncertainties over the future of a giant copper mine.

Authorities in Panama are grappling to contain weeks of demonstrations against a renegotiated contract that President Laurentino Cortizo’s administration signed with First Quantum for the Cobre Panama mine. The backlash underscores the challenges for mining to gain widespread acceptance at a time of heightened social and environmental scrutiny and resource nationalism.

Panama’s Congress has been convened to a special session Thursday for a third, definitive vote on the mine. On Wednesday, the bill was voted on by article and a provision to rescind a contract for the mine passing in a 63-0 vote. Final approval to repeal would make a proposed referendum of the contract unnecessary and send the arrangement to extend the Canadian firm’s mining license by 20 years into arbitration.

Shares of the Canadian miner rose as much as 8.3% Thursday in Toronto trading, after a three-day slide that wiped out almost half the company’s market value.

The bill also establishes an indefinite moratorium on metal mining nationwide and orders the government to reject all current and future requests for metal mining permits and renewals.

First Quantum has lost almost half its market value in the past week given the mine in Panama is its biggest money maker and accounts for about 1.5% of the world’s mined copper.

Protests continued in Panama City Wednesday night, with demonstrators blocking highways and demanding the supreme court declare the contract unconstitutional.

The court has accepted for consideration six suits against the contract in cases that claim it violates mineral sovereignty and international environmental treaties and fails to follow public bidding procedures.

The contractual uncertainties at Cobre Panama were spawned by a 2018 court ruling that preceded a prolonged renegotiation process as Panama sought more favorable terms. Congress finally signed off on a new contract on Oct. 20, with First Quantum agreeing to pay the state a minimum of $375 million a year. Those funds were earmarked for pension payments.

--With assistance from Jacob Lorinc.
Boeing Bowing Out of Starlink Competition Prompts Smug Response from Elon

George Dvorsky
Thu, November 2, 2023 

The launch of Boeing’s Varuna prototype internet satellite technology, September 5, 2022.

The launch of Boeing’s Varuna prototype internet satellite technology, September 5, 2022.

In the latest twist in the satellite industry, Boeing has decided to forfeit its license for a low Earth orbit (LEO) satellite constellation, a project that would’ve competed with SpaceX’s Starlink network.

Boeing’s plans to build a broadband internet constellation are officially over. At least for now. On Monday, Boeing formally surrendered its license to build the system and paid the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) a $2.2 million forfeiture penalty, as reported in Aerospace Daily, a subsidiary of Aviation Week. The FCC officially revoked Boeing’s license on October 12, a permit that had originally been granted to the company in November 2021.



Boeing had initially shown great interest in carving out its own footprint in the satellite constellation domain. Ryan Reid, president of Boeing Commercial Satellite Systems, discussed the company’s intentions during a 2021 interview with Aerospace Daily, expressing Boeing’s desire to establish partnerships for an NGSO (Non-Geostationary Satellite Orbit) constellation. Reid clarified that Boeing’s approach would differ from SpaceX’s Starlink, focusing more on business-to-business arrangements, similar to the model adopted by OneWeb, rather than Starlink’s direct-to-consumer model. He added that, while Boeing was not directly competing with Starlink, its customers would be.

Boeing launched its Varuna prototype satellite in September 2022 aboard a SpaceX Falcon 9 rideshare mission, marking a key first step in its satellite constellation development. This mission was meant to test the technologies intended for the full constellation, ensuring their functionality in space. A Sherpa-LTC 2 transfer vehicle hosts Boeing’s Varuna-TDM (Varuna Technology Demonstration Mission) payload, and it remains operational in orbit.

“Our V-Band test mission provided valuable data and learning. For now, we are not immediately pursuing a V-Band constellation,” said Parker. “We will continue to invest in opportunities that push what’s possible for connectivity in space.”

The FCC had originally granted Boeing a license to operate a 147-satellite V-band constellation, with Boeing later requesting an expansion to more than 5,000 satellites. The FCC’s stringent requirements mandated that Boeing deploy half of its constellation by November 2027 (i.e. six years after issuing the license). According to Aerospace Daily, Boeing’s request to relax these deployment rules was denied by the FCC, which aims to prevent spectrum squatting (a practice in which companies hold a license for spectrum usage without actively utilizing it, potentially hindering other companies from accessing valuable communication frequencies). It’s not clear if the 50% rule contributed to Boeing’s decision to drop the project. Boeing did not respond to Gizmodo’s request for clarification on this matter.

Boeing has stepped back from its megaconstellation ambitions, while SpaceX continues to solidify its position as the primary player. But this doesn’t close the door for other potential rivals to enter into the satellite internet fray. Amazon’s Project Kuiper is actively making strides, highlighted by the recent successful launch of two prototype satellites. Other noteworthy contenders vying for a piece of the satellite internet market include the aforementioned OneWeb, Telesat, and Astra.

Starlink achieves cash-flow breakeven, says SpaceX CEO Musk

Reuters
Thu, November 2, 2023 


(Reuters) -SpaceX CEO Elon Musk said on Thursday the rocket company's satellite internet unit, Starlink, had achieved cash flow breakeven.

In 2021, Musk said SpaceX would spin off and take Starlink public once its cash flow was reasonably predictable.

Since 2019, Starlink has grown its network in low-Earth orbit to roughly 5,000 satellites, swiftly positioning itself as the world's largest satellite operator and a rival to satellite internet firms such as Viasat and Eutelsat's newly acquired OneWeb.

"Starlink is also now a majority of all active satellites and will have launched a majority of all satellites cumulatively from Earth by next year," Musk said in a post on social media platform X on Thursday.

Starlink has been in the spotlight since last year as it helps provide Ukraine with satellite communications key to its war efforts against Russia.

Last month, Musk said Starlink will support communication links in Gaza with "internationally recognized aid organizations" after a telephone and internet blackout isolated people in the Gaza Strip from the world and from each other.

Musk has sought to establish the Starlink business unit as a crucial source of revenue to fund SpaceX's more capital-intensive projects such as its next-generation Starship, a giant reusable rocket the company intends to fly to the moon for NASA within the next decade.

Starlink posted a more than six-fold surge in revenue last year to $1.4 billion, but fell short of targets set by Musk, the Wall Street Journal reported in September, citing documents.

SpaceX is valued at about $150 billion and is one of the most valuable private companies in the world.

(Reporting by Chavi Mehta in Bengaluru and Joey Roulette in New York; Editing by Shinjini Ganguli)


SpaceX, NASA delay CRS-29 cargo launch to International Space Station

Elizabeth Howell
Wed, November 1, 2023

A rocket stands at a launchpad in front of a blue sky with majestic clouds.

The next cargo shipment to the International Space Station will wait on Earth two extra days.

NASA and SpaceX have delayed the Cargo Dragon CRS-29 mission launch to the International Space Station to Tuesday (Nov. 7) at 9:16 p.m. EST (1316 GMT), agency officials wrote in an email update Thursday (Nov. 1). Space.com will carry the SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket launch live, courtesy of NASA Television.

"The additional time allows for completion of final prelaunch processing," NASA officials wrote in the update about the mission, previously scheduled for Nov. 5. CRS-29 will lift off from Launch Complex 39A at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center (KSC) in Florida with 6,500 pounds (nearly 3,000 kg) of supplies, research and hardware.

Should the mission go to plan, the Dragon spacecraft will then dock with the ISS on Thursday (Nov. 9) shortly before 12 p.m. EST (1600 GMT), NASA added. Space.com will also have live coverage of this event.

Related: SpaceX to launch final piece of NASA's 1st two-way laser communications relay

A highlight of SpaceX's next science-packed mission includes launching a part of a two-way laser array to test out high-speed communications in low Earth orbit. NASA is looking to beef up communications capabilities and boost speed in preparation for its Artemis program, which aims to put astronauts on the moon's surface in 2025 or 2026 with Artemis 3.

The science haul also includes a NASA atmospheric waves experiment to study air disturbances in Earth's atmosphere, a European Space Agency investigation for water recovery on the ISS, and an ISS National Lab experiment studying how drug delivery is affected by mucus lining in the respiratory system.

Heirloom seeds grown by the Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma will also fly to the ISS aboard CRS-29 for a science, technology, engineering and math (STEM) education and workforce development opportunity, officials from Boeing (a partner on the project) posted on X, formerly Twitter, on Wednesday (Nov. 1).

Dragon typically brings onboard fresh food and replacement equipment for the astronauts as well. It will remain docked to the space station for several months before splashing down in the Atlantic Ocean. Dragon is the only currently operational ISS cargo spacecraft capable of refrigerating and returning temperature-sensitive samples, like blood, for the return to Earth.

RELATED STORIES:

Groundbreaking laser communications experiment flying to ISS on SpaceX cargo mission

SpaceX Crew-7 astronauts will handle over 200 science experiments on ISS

FAA wraps up safety review of SpaceX's huge Starship rocket

CRS-29 stands for Commercial Resupply Mission-29. SpaceX, along with Northrop Grumman's Cygnus spacecraft, sends cargo to the ISS under billion-dollar agreements with NASA. Those CRS contracts were first awarded in 2008 (back when Orbital ATK managed Cygnus) and have been extended as the space station continues flying. A third company, Sierra Nevada Corp. will eventually fly its Dream Chaser space plane to the ISS as well, under a newer CRS contract.

Russia's Progress also launches cargo missions from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan. Progress and Cygnus burn up in the atmosphere during return, and are often loaded with ISS trash that can safely be disposed of during re-entry. Like Dragon, the Dream Chaser space plane will be reusable, however.
LIKE JOHN BIRCH BEFORE THEM
Sen. Mike Lee, Rep. John Curtis support legislation to cut funding from United Nations

Gitanjali Poonia
Tue, October 31, 2023 

Finnish U.N. peacekeepers patrol the Lebanese side of the Lebanese-Israeli border in the southern village of Kfar Kila, Lebanon, on Thursday, Oct. 12, 2023. | Bilal Hussein, Associated Press



Utah Rep. John Curtis is cosponsoring a bipartisan bill — the Stand With Israel Act — to cut funding from the United Nations Human Rights Council after a resolution condemning the Hamas attacks on Oct. 7 failed to pass in the U.N. General Assembly.

“U.S. taxpayers should not be financially supporting a council that often acts as a stage for nations like China, Russia, Cuba, Venezuela, and others to divert attention from their own human rights abuses and target Israel,” Curtis, a Republican who represents Utah’s 3rd Congressional District, said in a post on X, formerly known as Twitter.

On Friday, the U.N. failed to pass a resolution condemning the Hamas attack on Israeli civilians. A separate resolution, drafted by Jordan, called for the release of more than 200 hostages alongside a call for a “sustained humanitarian truce,” as Hamas continues to bombard Israel and as Israel launches its ground offensive, according to CNN.

The U.S. was one of the 14 countries to vote against Jordan’s resolution, as The Guardian reported.

Curtis’ communications director Adam Cloch told the Deseret News that the Utah representative is concerned about Iran, its proxies, and issues within the U.N.

“We are seeing those concerns come to fruition right now with the Hamas attack on Israel,” Cloch added.

Utah Sen. Mike Lee is on the same page as Curtis and has already begun drafting legislation. He said in a post on X that it’s time to officially withdraw funding from the intergovernmental organization.

“The U.N. does a lot of bad things. And if it can’t even do a good thing as simple as condemning war crimes, it’s over between us,” he added.

“I want to be clear about this,” Lee, a Republican, said. “NOT. ONE. MORE. DOLLAR. NOT. ONE. MORE. CENT.”

The Stand With Israel Act was introduced by Rep. Anna Paulina Luna, R-Fla., on Monday. It seeks to cut funding from the U.N. until the international organization condemns Hamas’ attack on Israel, which resulted in the death of 1,400 Israelis.

“It should not be a heavy lift for the U.N., which claims to promote global human rights, to pass a resolution condemning what will go down in history as one of the deadliest attacks against the Jewish people,” Luna said in a press release, per Fox News.

As KSL News reported, the U.S. has been the biggest backer of the U.N. In 2021, it contributed nearly $12.5 billion to the organization.

Curtis also said in his post that Iran will be a leader in the U.N. Human Rights Council starting next week.

U.N. Watch press release noted that Iran’s “record of oppression, torture and executions make it ill-suited for the post,” which Tehran has held four other times.

John Kirby, spokesperson for the National Security Council in the White House, said at a press conference Monday, the U.S. recognizes that Iran, which has faced U.S. sanctions since 1979, backs Hamas, Hezbollah, Houthis and other terrorist groups in Iraq and Syria.